SCIENCE

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Solar Aircraft Lost Over the Pacific

Image credit: NASA
Final Helios Report Released
Sep 4, 2004 - The board inquiring into the loss of the remotely-operated Helios aircraft released its final report on Friday. Helios was a solar-powered aircraft, capable of flying higher than any conventional plane. During a test flight in June, 2003, the aircraft took off from the island of Kauai and flew out over the Pacific Ocean. About 30 minutes into its flight, turbulence caused Helios to become unstable, with its wings bending more than it was designed for. Shortly after that, the upper surface of the wing ripped off, and it plunged into the ocean. The board determined that NASA lacked the analysis tools to predict how turbulence could affect the plane in all conditions. (Full Story)

Plaque on the side of Pioneer 10.
Each symbol is intended
to tell alien intelligences about us.  

Click on image to enlarge.

METEOR SHOWER

LEONID METEORS: Every year in mid-November, Earth glides through a veritable minefield of comet dust clouds. The source: Comet 55P/Tempel-Tuttle. This weekend Earth will graze one of those clouds, producing an outburst of Leonid meteors.

If forecasters are correct, the outburst will peak around 0445 UT on Sunday, Nov. 19th (11:45 p.m. EST on Saturday, Nov. 18th). The timing favors observers in western Europe, Brazil and the Atlantic coast of North America, who could see as many as 100 meteors per hour: full story.

Although the shower is expected to peak sharply at 0445 UT on Nov. 19th, keep an eye on the sky at other times, too. Leonids may appear in fits and spurts all weekend long. The best time to watch, generally speaking, is during the hours before dawn when the constellation Leo is high in the sky: sky map.

PROJECTS

Building a Simple Sundial
Make a Sunclock
Make a Complex Sundial

S C I E N C E D A I L Y    U P D A T E


Terra Daily Express - June 30, 2006
www.terradaily.com
24/7 Coverage Of Earth in the 21st Century
 


NEWS AS OF 12:30 UTC - June 30, 2006
 

TODAYS CONTENT
FLORA AND FAUNA
EPIDEMICS
FROTH AND BUBBLE

ENERGY TECH
CAR TECH
WEATHER REPORT
DISASTER MANAGEMENT

 

ABOUT US
SHUTTLE NEWS
INTERNET SPACE

MOON DAILY
NUKEWARS
SUPERPOWERS
TERROR WARS
 

TODAYS NEWS IN BRIEF

FLORA AND FAUNA

+ Museum Of Natural History Finds Baby Ice Age Sloth

Iowa City IA (SPX) Jun 28, 2006
For the past three years, students, staff and volunteers from the University of Iowa Museum of Natural History, UI Department of Geoscience in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and the Office of the State Archaeologist have been excavating, analyzing and carefully reconstructing the bones of an ice-age giant sloth from a site near Shenandoah, Iowa.

+ Chameleon-Like Snake Discovered In Indonesia
+ Scientists Puzzled By Sand Bacteria
+ Scientists Investigate Giant Algae Bloom Off Canadian West Coast


 


EPIDEMICS

+ Effects Of Avian Flu Pandemic Disasterous

Washington (UPI) Jun 30, 2006
An avian influenza pandemic "could kill millions of people, cripple economies, bring international trade and travel to a standstill and even jeopardize political stability," according to Under Secretary of State for Democracy and Global Affairs Paula J. Dobriansky.


 


FROTH AND BUBBLE

+ China Ratifies International Convention On Oceanic Pollution

Beijing (AFP) Jun 29, 2006
China's parliament ratified Thursday an international treaty on preserving the marine environment and preventing pollution on the high seas, state press said Thursday. The National People's Congress ratified the 1996 Convention of Marine Pollution by Dumping of Wastes and Other Matter at a session that ended here Thursday, Xinhua news agency said.

+ Landfills And Chemical Weapon Debris A Good Match


 


ENERGY TECH

+ First Global Lighting Study Is Released

Paris (UPI) Jun 30, 2006
The first global survey of lighting uses and costs suggests the world's electric bill would greatly decrease with a switch to efficient lighting systems. The Paris-based International Energy Agency, which conducted the study, said it found lighting is a major source of electricity consumption.

+ Germany Now Has Two Energy Plans


 


CAR TECH

+ Back Middle Car Seat Maybe Un-Cool But It Is The Safest Car Seat

Buffalo NY (UPI) Jun 28, 2006
A U.S. study shows the middle of a car's back seat may be the least desirable, most uncomfortable and most "un-cool" spot -- but it is also the safest. University at Buffalo researchers studied all U.S. automobile crashes involving a fatality between 2000 and 2003 in which someone occupied the rear middle-seat.


 


WEATHER REPORT

+ Romania Probes Foreign Plot To Worsen Its Weather

Bucharest (AFP) Jun 29, 2006
The Romanian senate has opened an inquiry into "indications" that floods that have battered the country were the result of a "metereological war waged by a foreign power," a senator said Thursday.


 


DISASTER MANAGEMENT

+ FEMA Reform Plans Pick Up Pace

Washington (UPI) Jun 30, 2006
One of the leading advocates in the U.S. Congress of removing the Federal Emergency Management Agency from the Department of Homeland Security has reversed himself, joining sponsors of a bill to reform the agency within the department.


 


ABOUT US

+ Big Brother Eyes Encourage Honesty

Newcastle upon Tyne, UK (SPX) Jun 28, 2006
UK scientists have found a way of making people behave more honestly in an experiment that could aid strategies for tackling anti-social behaviour. A team from Newcastle University found people put nearly three times as much money into an 'honesty box' when they were being watched by a pair of eyes on a poster, compared with a poster that featured an image of flowers.


 


INTERNET SPACE

+ Satellite to Aid Education In Northeast India

Agartala, India (IANS) Jun 30, 2006
Students in India's northeast will soon have satellite-based educational facilities available. Three states - Tripura, Mizoram and Nagaland - will be included in the first phase of the hi-tech facilities using the services of EDUSAT, a dedicated satellite for education launched in 2004.


 


SHUTTLE NEWS

+ Bad Weather Threatens To Delay Controversial Discovery Launch

Cape Canaveral FL (AFP) Jun 29, 2006
NASA officials kept a close eye Thursday on a storm threatening to delay Discovery's controversial launch set for Saturday, only the second flight since the Columbia tragedy. US space agency officials said the shuttle was ready to rocket into orbit if weather permits and again defended their decision to go ahead with the mission despite lingering concerns over safety.

+ Shuttle Countdown Proceeding Despite Concerns
+ Space Shuttle Mission Details
+ The US Space Shuttle An Aging Transport Vehicle
+ Saturday Launch Marks Quarter Century For Shuttle
+ Shuttle Discovery To Launch Into A Worrying Unknown


 


MOON DAILY

+ Mysterious Lunar Swirls

Huntsville AL (SPX) Jun 30, 2006
Picture this: A cup of coffee, steaming and black. Add a dollop of milk and gently stir. Eddies of cream go swirling around the cup. Magnify that image a million times and you've got a Lunar Swirl.


 


NUKEWARS

+ Chinese Leadership Calls For Build Up Of Strategic Missile Forces

Beijing (AFP) Jun 29, 2006
Chinese President Hu Jintao has pledged to step up scientific and technological reforms in the military, as he marked the 40th anniversary of the nation's nuclear force, state media said Thursday.

+ World Powers Give Iran A Week To Respond
+ Iran Rejects Calls To Give Speedy Response To Nuclear Package
+ Bush And Koizumi Warn North Korea Against Launching Test Missile
+ NKorea Missile Test Could Derail Six-Way Talks


 


SUPERPOWERS

+ The Costs Of America's War Escalating

Moscow (UPI) Jun 30, 2006
The Bush administration allocated huge sums towards military programs, though the money was spent not on the planned acquisition of arms, but on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and on other similar operations. This means that the U.S. Department of Defense's budget remained the same in fixed prices as under President Ronald Reagan, but spending on acquisitions has been cut to a third.


 


TERROR WARS

+ Is The Middle Ages On The Comeback Trail

Washington (UPI) Jun 30, 2006
Three years ago the Taliban operated in squad sized units. Last year they operated in company sized units (100+ men). This year the Taliban are operating in battalion-sized units (400+ men). So reported Gen. Barry R. McCaffrey (Ret), professor of International Affairs at West Point, after his second trip to Afghanistan to assess the balance of forces.

+ UK Court Ruling Leaves Terror Policy In Shreds


 


THE ENVIRONMENT

Climatolgist Debunks 'Alarmist' Claims of Global Warming

On Mon, 14 Jul 2003 08:51:16 -0700, "NewsMax.com"
<newsmax@newsmax.sparklist.com> wrote:


Climatolgist Debunks 'Alarmist' Claims of Global Warming
 
"The science is settled in a very non-alarmist way," notes
Patrick Michaels, environmental sciences professor at the
University of Virginia.

Click here for the full story:
http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2003/7/14/103443.shtml


Climatolgist Debunks 'Alarmist' Claims of Global Warming

Marc Morano, CNSNews.com

Monday, July 14, 2003

WASHINGTON - Climatologist Patrick J. Michaels says fears of
catastrophic global warming are scientifically unfounded and "alarmist."
Any climate change that does occur would not affect Earth or its
inhabitants in any significant way, he said.
"The science is settled in a very non-alarmist way," Michaels told
CNSNews.com. He predicted that his message would not be well received by
many in the climate debate.

"A non-alarmist way is politically very unpopular in Washington, D.C.,"
he said.

Michaels, author of the book "Satanic Gasses: Clearing the Air about
Global Warming" and an environmental sciences professor at the
University of Virginia, was the featured speaker at a luncheon sponsored
by Cato Institute on Friday.

"Scientific data really tells us how much it is going to warm over the
next 100 years, and it's going to be at the low end of the projections,
and people will adapt as long as their economies are free. We have been
adapting for a long time," Michaels explained.

He said he expected a negligible warm-up and pointed to the past 100
years as proof that any effects of potential increased global
temperatures would be negligible.

"As the planet warmed up about 1 degree Fahrenheit in the last 100
years, the life span in the industrialized democracies went from 40 to
80 [years], and crop yields doubled. Global warming did not cause that,
but it didn't stop it either," Michaels said.

Instead of being concerned about potential climate change, people should
"worry about something that is really a serious problem," he said.

The whole debate over climate change is over, according to Michaels.

"You would think I would tire of shooting fish in barrels, but it's
still fun, and that is what's going on here," Michaels said.

If the U.N. Says It's True, It Must Be True


Debbie Boger, an energy expert with Sierra Club, dismissed Michaels'
claim that the debate is over.

"We need to remember both the National Academy of Sciences and the
U.N.'s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change have both come out with
reports saying global warming is a real phenomenon, caused by human-made
emissions and will have real consequences," Boger told CNSNews.com.

"To say there will be not be consequences is putting our heads in the
sand," she said.

Secular 'Religion'

Michaels called the persistent belief in catastrophic global warming "a
religion" and said that is why he has faced so much opposition to his
scientific work.

"If you say something against a religion, people yell out at you. People
wonder why I drive a [low-emission] hybrid car - they would never blow
up a hybrid car," he said to laughter.

What Happened to That Recent 'Ice Age'?

Michaels outlined three periods of atmospheric change in the last 100
years of U.S. history, noting a warming in the first part of the 20th
century, a cooling in the middle part of the century and a warming in
the latter part of the century.

"There is the cooling of the mid-20th century that gave rise to
congressional hearings in the mid-1970s about the coming ice age, and
[scientists were asked], 'Could you use a couple billion dollars to
study this?'" Michaels said.

The money politicized the scientific process and "consume billions of
dollars of your money," he said.

"The more money you throw at [climate science], the less certainty you
get. If you shut off all the money, the scientists would probably all
agree," he said.

The scientific proof that man could not affect our environment with
emissions of greenhouse gases in any catastrophic way already exists,
Michaels believes.

"Paleo records indicate that the concentration of the greenhouse gas
carbon dioxide in the atmosphere was up to 14 times higher than it is
today when the Earth was but 8 degrees Celsius warmer than it is today,"
Michaels said, referring to the climate of millions of years ago.

There is no way we can get Earth that hot again, he said, even "if we
burn everything as fast as we could."

Earth was not unpleasant during the period of high CO2 concentrations
and higher temperatures, according to Michaels.

"The planet was greener than a [casino] crap table. That is where all
that coal came from that we are burning now," he explained.

Michaels does not expect the media to portray climate change as anything
but catastrophic. "The media are either very untrained in the field or
really are looking the other way," Michaels said.

"Unfortunately, they have pumped this mindset up so much that it is very
clear that people are beginning to get ... apocalyptic fatigue," he
said.

'Plutonian Global Warming'

Chris Horner, a senior fellow at the free-market environmental think
tank Competitive Enterprise Institute, attended the luncheon and pointed
to the recent scientific indications that the planet Pluto is warming
despite moving away from the sun.

"Pluto's warm-up is a reminder that no matter where you are climate
happens. It always has, it always will - with or without SUVs. And it
should remind us to continue taking with an ever-increasing grain of
salt these claims that your car acts as a weather machine," Horner said.

Horner predicted that it would not be long before environmentalists came
up with a theory on why Pluto was warming.

"There will be inevitably and likely imminent claims that mankind is
also causing Plutonian global warming," he said.

LINKS

A Meteoroid Hits the Moon (06-14-06)
Solar Storm Warning (03-10-06)
Radical! Liquid Water on Enceladus (03-10-06)
Solar Minimum has Arrived (03-08-06
Electric Hurricanes (01-11-06)
Apollo Chronicles 01.03.2006
Thanksgiving Skies (11-23-05)
Mesmerized by Moondust (11-21-05)
Space-time Vortex (11-17-05)
An Odd List of Body Parts (10-27-05)
How is a rocket like a guitar? 10-24-05)
Building a Better Rocket Engine (10-17-05)
Who's Afraid of a Solar Flare? (10-07-05)
The Da Vinci Glow (10-05-05)
Solar Minimum Explodes (09-1505)
Moon Tennis (08-31-05)
Sunset Planets (08-26-05)
Plastic Spaceships (08-26-05)
Crackling Planets (08-13-05)
Prozac for Plants (08-07-05)
10th Planet" Discovered (07-30-05)
Object Bigger than Pluto Discovered, Called 10th Planet (07-30-05)
The Next Giant Leap (04-27-05)
The Devils of Mars (07-14-05)
A Force Field for Astronauts? (06-25-05)
A New Kind of Solar Storm (06-11-065)
NASA Naps (060305)
Approaching Mars  (05-29-05)
A Hitchhiker's Guide to the Moon (05-24-05)
Mysterious Cancer (05-09-05)
Solar Eclipse (04-03-05)
Moon Fountains (03-31-05)
Picking on Einstein (03-28-05)
Was Einstein a Space Alien? (03-24-05)
Science@NASA ... to go (03-21-05)
Cutting Edge Physics for Us All (03-09-05)
Ultrasound for Astronauts (02-17-05)
Sights and Sounds of Titan (0119-05)
How the Earthquake affected Earth (01-11-05)
Team me up, Scotty (01-10-04)
Green Comet (01-06-05)
Parachuting to Titan (12-31-04)
The world's largest airborne observatory prepares to take wing. (12-31-04)
Christmas Moon (12-25-04)
A Breeze from the Stars (12-17-04)
The Geminid Meteor Shower (10-07-04)
Tumbleweeds in the Bloodstream 10-29-04)
Blinding Flashes (10-23-04)

The Orionid meteor shower peaks this week on Thursday morning, Oct. 21st. (10-20-04)

Solar Cycle Update (10-19-04)
Total Lunar Eclipse (10-13-04)
Beware: Io Dust (09-15-04)
Secrets of a Salty Survivor (09-10-04)
Genesis Reentry (09-06-04)
"Gentlemen, start your gyros!"
The Pathway Less Traveled (08-28-04)
Helicopter Will Catch Samples from Genesis (08-23-04)
Have Blood, Will Travel (08-20-04)
Soldering Surprise (08-17-04)
Blue Moon (04-11-04)
Saturn Hailstorm (07-11-014)
Titan's Surface Revealed (07-05-04)
Whatever happened to ... Virtual Reality? (06-22-04)
Asteroid Wiped Out the Dinosaurs in Hours (05-26-04)
Why so Dry? (05-23-04)
Waste Not (05-20-04)
The Electric Border Collie (05-16-04)
Extreme Ecosystem 05-13-04)
Was Galileo Wrong? (05-07-04)
UFO Planet (05-03-04)
A Pocket of Near-Perfection (04-28-04)
Keeping an Eye on Central America (04-24-04)
Resilient Rockets (04-14-04)
Mystery in a Cup of Tea (04-10-04)
A Black Box for People 04-08-04)
The Nameless Hurricane (04-04-04)
Solar Plane Will Attempt to Go Around the Earth (04-01-04)
X-43A Soars on Scramjet Power (03-29-04)
Evicting Einstein (03-26-04)
A Gathering of Planets (03-19-04)
Outbreak Alerts from Space (03-12-04)
A Chilling Possibility (03-06-04)
Meridiani Planum: "Drenched" (03-03-04)
Greenhouses for Mars (02-25-04)
Microscopic Astronauts (02-23-04)
Radio Storms on Jupiter (02-21-04)
Can People Go to Mars? (02-20-04)
Black Hole Mayhem (02-20-04)

A New Form of Matter: II (02-13-04)

The Fruit Fly in You (02-04-04)

Spooky Atomic Clocks (01-23-04)

Destination: Meridiani Planum (01-22-04)
Mars Mice (01-21-04)
Stardust Surprise (01-16-04)
Getting Closer to Saturn
Storm Warnings (01-12-04)
In Colliding Galaxies: Planetary Ore (01-10-04)
Eighth Attempt to Reach Beagle 2 Fails (01-02-04)
The World in a Grain of Stardust (12-31-03
Destination: Gusev Crater 12-30-03
Earth's Inconstant Magnetic Field (12-30-03)
Spring Thaws are Getting Earlier (12-11-03)
Christmas Sunset (12-10-03)
Dixieland Auroras (12-05-03)
Cracks in Earth's Magnetic Shield (12-04-03)
Membranes on Mars (12-03-03)

Space: A bad influence on microbes? (12-01-03)

The Sun Goes Haywire  (11-14-03)
Lunar Eclipse (11-04-03)
November 8–9, Lunar Eclipse (11-04-03)
The Hidden Life of Thunderstorms (10-31-032)
Solar Superstorm (10-24-03)
Total Lunar Eclipse - November 9, 2003 (10-23-03)
Two Magical Mornings (10-20-03)
DNA Biosentinels (10-07-03)
Cassini Confirms General Relativity (10-03-03)
Balancing Brains (10-03-03)
Huge Iceberg Breaks Away from Antarctica (10-02-03)

The Goldilocks Zone (10-02-03)


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